Most builders don’t have a product problem.
They have a clarity problem.
I learned this the hard way.
I was building consistently.
Shipping features. Adding AI. Improving things.
Still — nothing moved.
No users.
No feedback.
No signal.
It felt like progress.
It wasn’t.
I wasn’t validating ideas.
I was just executing them.
So I kept building things that looked good but didn’t matter.
I built Syra.
Think of it as a thinking engine for startup ideas.
You give it an idea.
It forces you to confront:
– what assumptions you’re making
– where it breaks
– whether it’s actually worth building
It doesn’t help you build faster.
It helps you avoid building the wrong thing.
I stopped asking:
“how do I build this?”
and started asking:
“should this exist?”
That shift saved me weeks.
If 10 people don’t care about your idea,
no amount of code will fix it.
Syra:
https://syra.up.railway.app
My portfolio:
https://yogyagoyal.up.railway.app
If you’ve built before, I want real feedback — not validation.
I looked at the landing page
At first sight it seems Syra is validating the product idea only. But distribution is also super important and a bad distribution could prevent awesome ideas to grow into profitable startups
Question: is Syra just a LLM wrapper or does it check real data to get an idea of market demand?
Feedback on the landing page: looks beautiful and simple, but the contrast is pretty low on some texts, that makes it hard to read (dark gray text on black background)
This is a really solid take — especially on distribution.
Right now Syra is more focused on idea and assumption validation, but I agree with you:
an idea without distribution is incomplete. That’s something I’m actively thinking about expanding into.
On your question:
Syra isn’t a single-pass LLM response or just a wrapper.
Each analysis runs through a multi-step pipeline (usually ~15–20 steps) where it:
– breaks the idea into assumptions
– performs targeted internet research
– cross-checks signals
– then synthesizes a structured output
So it’s closer to a process-driven analysis system than a single prompt.
That said, I wouldn’t claim it has perfect visibility into real market demand yet — especially on deeper distribution signals. That’s definitely a gap I want to close.
Also appreciate the UI feedback — the contrast point is valid, I’ll fix that.
Curious — when you evaluate ideas early, what signals do you personally rely on most for demand and distribution?
To be honest I have zero experience building profitable products. Only built an open source app some of my friends are using, and recently deployed a landing page for another app idea with zero visitors for now
Demand signal I personally use the most when choosing what project to spend time on: seeing the problem myself and no obvious solution (either I have the problem, I solve it for me and make the solution public, or I see people around me having a problem and I build a solution), because it means even if a product solving this problem exists, since I don't see an obvious solution it means there is still room for another product on the market
Distribution signal I currently use the most: checking how competitors distribute their product, and (more difficult) checking how failed startups with the same idea tried to distribute
This comment was deleted 11 days ago.